The History of English Poetry: From the Close of the Eleventh to the Commencement of the Eighteenth Century, כרך 1T. Tegg, 1824 - 482 עמודים |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 11-15 מתוך 99
עמוד 67
... seems to imply some similar resource on the part of his Eastern traveller . Another mysterious personage of early Grecian fable , and whose goetic practices , like those of Abaris , have secured for him a dubious fame , is Epimenides ...
... seems to imply some similar resource on the part of his Eastern traveller . Another mysterious personage of early Grecian fable , and whose goetic practices , like those of Abaris , have secured for him a dubious fame , is Epimenides ...
עמוד 68
... seems to have delighted in investing the Theban Hercules with much the same absurdities that Northern fable has gathered round the person of Thor , had recourse to a similar invention as the only appropriate means of appeasing this ...
... seems to have delighted in investing the Theban Hercules with much the same absurdities that Northern fable has gathered round the person of Thor , had recourse to a similar invention as the only appropriate means of appeasing this ...
עמוד 71
... seems to have drawn his materials from an Armorican source . From Wolfram's poem we gather , that Master Kyot obtained his first knowledge of the Graal from a manuscript he discovered at Toledo . This volume was written in a heathen ...
... seems to have drawn his materials from an Armorican source . From Wolfram's poem we gather , that Master Kyot obtained his first knowledge of the Graal from a manuscript he discovered at Toledo . This volume was written in a heathen ...
עמוד 75
... seems to have been a common metonymy ; for in the passage already cited from Pausanias , the brazen ewer deposited by Aristomenes , is term- ed a brazen bed by the old man who ap- peared to Epiteles in his dream . 122 From the Grecian ...
... seems to have been a common metonymy ; for in the passage already cited from Pausanias , the brazen ewer deposited by Aristomenes , is term- ed a brazen bed by the old man who ap- peared to Epiteles in his dream . 122 From the Grecian ...
עמוד 79
... seems to illustrate the lan- guage of Joseph of Arimathy , to Sir Percival : " And wotest thou where- fore [ our Lord ] hath sent me more than other ? for thou hast resembled me in two things ; one is , that thou hast seen the ...
... seems to illustrate the lan- guage of Joseph of Arimathy , to Sir Percival : " And wotest thou where- fore [ our Lord ] hath sent me more than other ? for thou hast resembled me in two things ; one is , that thou hast seen the ...
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
afterwards Anglo-Saxon antient appears apud Arabian Armorica Arthur bards Bede Beowulf Bibl bishop Bodl Bodleian library Brit British Britons Brunne called century CHAP Charlemagne Chaucer Chron chronicle cited dæmon Dares Phrygius Dictys Cretensis Du Cange Edda edit England English fable fiction France Geoffrey of Monmouth GESTA GESTA ROMANORUM Graal Greek Harl Henry hero Hist historian holy ibid infr king king Arthur knight kyng language Latin learned Leland londe manuscript ment mentioned metrical minstrels monastery monk Norman northern Odin original Paris passage piece poem poet poetry popular printed probably prose reign rhyme Richard Ritson Robert Saint Saracens Saxon says Script sone song story supposed tale ther thou tion translated ubi supr verse Vincent of Beauvais Warton Welsh William of Malmesbury writer written wrote